184 research outputs found

    Religiosity, spirituality, and mental health in eight countries

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    Meta-analyses suggest that religiosity has a positive relationship with mental health. However, methodological concerns limit findings. The purpose of the study was to analyze linear and curvilinear relationships among religiosity, spirituality, and mental health using open science practices and a multinational sample. Relationships among self-reported religiosity, spirituality, depression, anxiety, stress, and life satisfaction were assessed using mixed-effect linear regressions from a publicly available multinational data set of participants (N = 1,754; eight countries: Brazil, Indonesia, Thailand, China, Russia, India, Turkey, and the United States). Within a multinational sample, religiosity was associated with depression (Ī² = āˆ’0.09, p < .001, 95% CI [āˆ’0.15, 0.04]) and life satisfaction (Ī² = 0.22, p < .001, 95% CI [.17, .27]), but not anxiety or stress. Religiosity was quadratically associated with anxiety (Ī² = āˆ’0.07, p = .03, 95% CI [āˆ’0.13, āˆ’0.01]) and stress (Ī² = āˆ’0.06, p = .05, 95% CI [āˆ’.012, .00]), but not depression or life satisfaction. Spirituality was associated with depression (Ī² = āˆ’0.08, p < .001, 95% CI [āˆ’.13, .03]) and life satisfaction (Ī² = 0.14, p < .001, 95% CI [.09, .19]), but not anxiety or stress. Spirituality had no quadratic associations. Findings suggest accounting for methodological limitations and acknowledging the importance and murkiness regarding relationships among religiosity, spirituality, and mental health

    myTunes: Digital music library users and their self-images

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    This investigation explored the relationships between individualsā€™ self-images and their interactions with their digital music collections via the commercially predominant program iTunes. Sixty-nine university students completed an internet-based Musical Self-Images Questionnaire (MSIQ) along with a series of questions concerning their iTunes collections. The majority of participants were highly engaged with music, regardless of their varied musical backgrounds. Factor analysis of the MSIQ data revealed two distinct self-image groups, which we label as ā€˜musical practitionerā€™ (linking ā€˜overall musicianā€™, ā€˜performerā€™, ā€˜composerā€™, ā€˜teacherā€™, and ā€˜listenerā€™) and ā€˜music consumerā€™ (linking ā€˜listenerā€™, ā€˜fanā€™, and ā€˜technology userā€™). Participants used an average of seven attributes to categorize their music, and most consistently used one in particular to sort their collections. Those who rated themselves as higher level performers and fans used the playlist function (which involves compiling sequences of selected tracks) more often than those with lower self-ratings on those scales

    Factors influencing publication choice: why faculty choose open access

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    BACKGROUND: In an attempt to identify motivating factors involved in decisions to publish in open access and open archives (OA) journals, individual interviews with biomedical faculty members at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill) and Duke University, two major research universities, were conducted. The interviews focused on faculty identified as early adopters of OA/free full-text publishing. METHODS: Searches conducted in PubMed and PubMed Central identified faculty from the two institutions who have published works in OA/free full-text journals. The searches targeted authors with multiple OA citations during a specified 18 month period. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with the most prolific OA authors at each university. Individual interviews attempted to determine whether the authors were aware they published in OA journals, why they chose to publish in OA journals, what factors influenced their publishing decisions, and their general attitude towards OA publishing models. RESULTS & DISCUSSION: Fourteen interviews were granted and completed. Respondents included a fairly even mix of Assistant, Associate and Full professors. Results indicate that when targeting biomedical faculty at UNC-Chapel Hill and Duke, speed of publication and copyright retention are unlikely motivating factors or incentives for the promotion of OA publishing. In addition, author fees required by some open access journals are unlikely barriers or disincentives. CONCLUSION: It appears that publication quality is of utmost importance when choosing publication venues in general, while free access and visibility are specifically noted incentives for selection of OA journals. Therefore, free public availability and increased exposure may not be strong enough incentives for authors to choose open access over more traditional and respected subscription based publications, unless the quality issue is also addressed

    Gas Source Molecular Beam Epitaxy of Compound Semiconductors

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    Contains an introduction and reports on seven research projects.Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Subcontract 284-25041Joint Services Electronics Program Contract DAAL04-95-1-0038National Center for Integrated Photonic Technology Contract 542-381U.S. Army Research Office/ AASERT Contract DAAH04-93-G-0175National Science Foundation Grant DMR 92-02957Joint Services Electronics Program Grant DAAL04-95-1-0038National Science Foundation Grant DMR 90-22933National Science Foundation Grant DMR 92-02957National Center for Integrated Photonic Technology Contract 542-381MIT Lincoln LaboratoryNational Center for Integrated Photonic Technology Subcontract 542-383National Science Foundation DMR 94-0033

    Epitaxial Growth and Processing of Compound Semiconductors

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    Contains an introduction and reports on six research projects.Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency/U.S. Navy - Office of Naval Research University Research Initiative Subcontract N00014-92-J-1893Joint Services Electronics Program Grant DAAH04-95-1-0038National Center for Integrated Photonics Technology Contract 542-381National Science Foundation Grant DMR 92-02957MIT Lincoln Laboratory Contract BX-6085National Center for Integrated Photonics Technology Subcontract 542-383U.S. Air Force - Office of Scientific Research Grant F49620-96-1-0126U.S. Navy - Office of Naval Research Grant N00014-91-J-1956National Science Foundation Grant DMR 94-0033

    Who Shares? Who Doesn't? Factors Associated with Openly Archiving Raw Research Data

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    Many initiatives encourage investigators to share their raw datasets in hopes of increasing research efficiency and quality. Despite these investments of time and money, we do not have a firm grasp of who openly shares raw research data, who doesn't, and which initiatives are correlated with high rates of data sharing. In this analysis I use bibliometric methods to identify patterns in the frequency with which investigators openly archive their raw gene expression microarray datasets after study publication

    Optics and Quantum Electronics

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    Contains table of contents on Section 3 and reports on nineteen research projects.Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Grant F49620-96-0126Joint Services Electronics Program Grant DAAH04-95-1-0038National Science Foundation Grant ECS 94-23737U.S. Air Force - Office of Scientific Research Contract F49620-95-1-0221U.S. Navy - Office of Naval Research Grant N00014-95-1-0715Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency/National Center for Integrated Photonics TechnologyMultidisciplinary Research InitiativeU.S. Air Force - Office of Scientific ResearchNational Science Foundation/MRSECU.S. Navy - Office of Naval Research (MFEL) Contract N00014-91-J-1956National Institutes of Health Grant R01-EY11289U.S. Navy - Office of Naval Research (MFEL) Contract N00014-94-0717Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Contract N66001-96-C-863

    The impact of adjuvant therapy on contralateral breast cancer risk and the prognostic significance of contralateral breast cancer: a population based study in the Netherlands

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    Background The impact of age and adjuvant therapy on contralateral breast cancer (CBC) risk and prognostic significance of CBC were evaluated. Patients and Methods In 45,229 surgically treated stage Iā€“IIIA patients diagnosed in the Netherlands between 1989 and 2002 CBC risk was quantified using standardised incidence ratios (SIRs), cumulative incidence and Cox regression analysis, adjusted for competing risks. Results Median follow-up was 5.8Ā years, in which 624 CBC occurred <6Ā months after the index cancer (synchronous) and 1,477 thereafter (metachronous). Older age and lobular histology were associated with increased synchronous CBC risk. Standardised incidence ratio (SIR) of CBC was 2.5 (95% confidence interval (95% CI) 2.4ā€“2.7). The SIR of metachronous CBC decreased with index cancer age, from 11.4 (95% CI 8.6ā€“14.8) when <35 to 1.5 (95% CI 1.4ā€“1.7) for ā‰„60Ā years. The absolute excess risk of metachronous CBC was 26.8/10,000 person-years. The cumulative incidence increased with 0.4% per year, reaching 5.9% after 15Ā years. Adjuvant hormonal (Hazard rate ratio (HR) 0.58; 95% CI 0.48ā€“0.69) and chemotherapy (HR 0.73; 95% CI 0.60ā€“0.90) were associated with a markedly decreased CBC risk. A metachronous CBC worsened survival (HR 1.44; 95% CI 1.33ā€“1.56). Conclusion Young breast cancer patients experience high synchronous and metachronous CBC risk. Adjuvant hormonal or chemotherapy considerably reduced the risk of CBC. CBC occurrence adversely affects prognosis, emphasizing the necessity of long-term surveillance directed at early CBC-detection
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